9to5Mac (click link to read) is reporting that the staff training for iCloud and iOS 5 may just be around the corner following shots from an internal RetailMe application used by staff. As 9to5 point out, this time may be different to previous evidence but staff training usually precedes a couple of weeks or so before a release.

Lion has a neat little feature discovered by @AppleFortyTwo. If you need a word looking up, three finger tap on your multitouch pad and hey presto, a neat dictionary pop up appears. See picture.

9To5 Mac are also reporting that the integration of Dictionary in Lion is much more prevalent including iBooks integration and an official SDK allowing developers to integrate Dictionary with ease. They also report seeing much more integration in iOS 5 for Apple mobile device suite.

BGR have been testing iOS 5 and giving daily updates of Living with the operating system. And the feedback is good with BGR declaring iOS 5 the one to beat. With features such as iMessage beating Blackberry’s BBM service, the notifications app working so well, the Reminders App and tweaks to Mail all cited as filling the gaps that iOS previously had.

Can’t wait for a consumer version, hopefully it will be even better. Also check out 9to5Mac for various other features they are constantly discovering within iOS 5.

9 to 5 Mac has pointed to another feature of iOS 5 not mentioned on Monday earlier this week at WWDC.

If you stream music over Bluetooth to an audio receiver, you will now be able to allow the receiver (if capable) to read the the some of the meta data such as artist, album & track which are usually embedded in the ID3 tag of the media file.

We just need car manufacturers and alike (some already do such as Toyota) to catch up with the media systems in our cars! Neat!

The Telegraph and MacRumors have highlighted a quote from a spokesperson for the Performing Right Society. The spokesperson it quoted as saying that Apple are “a long way off from any deals being signed.”

The articles also refer to a music executive at a major UK record label quoting “no one expects to see the cloud music service live on this side of the pond until 2012.”

This adds further to our post earlier this week regards a delay in the service outside of the US.